Wednesday 30 November 2011

North Rock in Private Eye Nov 2011

Just how good a banker is Richard Branson?

Well he’s not really a banker at all, according to the latest figures from his Virgin Money group, which will soon be replacing the Northern Rock name on the high street.

Virgin Money is a credit card business run in association with MasterCard and real banks such as Bank of America and until recently, Royal bank of Scotland. For 2010 it had a turnover of £74m, on which it made a pre-tax profit of £42.5m. Its income from loan business was just £156,000.Virgin Bank, formerly Church House Trust, acquired for £13 million, plus the existing unit trust, ISA and insurance business, is to be found in Virgin Money Holdings (UK), the parent also of Virgin Money. Banking produced revenues of just £1.2 million last year out of £91 million. These were dwarfed by the credit card income and by £28 million from “investment and protection”.

Banking produced a first year loss of £2.7 million (Church House was acquired for its banking licence; Virgin deposits were previously held at RBS), whereas the group profit was £36.5 million. There were further losses of £12 million due in part to “building a retailing banking platform”. Virgin Bank is in effect a start-up, as indicated by a loan book of just £21 million and total banking assets of £134 million.

The main UK parent for the Branson bank is Virgin Financial Services UK Holdings. Its cash flow statement showed an outflow of cash from operating activities in 20120 of £75 million, plus another £11 million on capital expenditure and investment. That hole was largely filled by Branson’s American partner, financier Wilbur Ross, who injected £96.5 million in return for 22 per cent of Virgin Money Holdings.

The Ross investment came from America’s home grown tax haven, the state of Delaware. But then the Virgin banking business, including now Northern Rock, all goes back to the equally tax-efficient British Virgin Islands, and those Branson discretionary family trusts.

 Does the lack of Virgin banking experience suggest that Northern Rock is seen more as an investment than a career, with the aim of selling off in part, via a flotation, or whole to a bigger rival sooner rather than later at a profit – unlike the government?

If anyone disputes the financial data we’d be happy to hear from them….

Monday 21 November 2011

Chancellor has signed a bad deal for taxpayers with Northern Rock sale

Michael Stephenson, General Secretary of the Co-operative Party, said:



Today the Chancellor has signed a bad deal for the future of Northern Rock. George Osborne has missed a real opportunity to return the Rock as a new mutual, which would have signalled the government had learnt crucial lessons from the banking crisis. The sale to Virgin is a resurrection of the failed former model. This fire-sale demonstrates Osborne is not willing to think long term about how banks can serve their customers and reduce risk for taxpayers.

Thursday 17 November 2011

Lost opportunity in Northern Rock sale

The news today that the Government has sold our bank to Virgin Money is a great disappointment and a lost opportunity.

The deal in my view significantly undervalues the long term worth of a newly capitalised bank with few poor debts.

The price of £747 million plus perhaps further bonus payments is more about the Chancellor being able to make a political statement about Government getting out of the banking business than a fair deal for all.

And even at that price it should be remembered that it’s based on having expropriated our shares – something that didn’t happen to RBS or Lloyds. Maybe this was because they had more friends in high places in the City than we did.

The opportunity that’s been missed is to allow Northern Rock to have returned to the mutual sector and remain focussed on its historical role – financing homes for ordinary people.

No doubt the name will be swept away and replaced by one which has been used for cola, wedding dresses and a plethora of unsuccessful business activities.

It’s a sad day for all of us in the North East of England.


Robin Ashby

Friday 7 October 2011

Zero value of Northern Rock shares is upheld

by Iain Laing, The Journal Oct 7 2011

A TRIBUNAL has turned down an appeal against the decision that Northern Rock shares had no value after the Government bail-out.

Shareholders challenged the valuation of the Newcastle bank’s shares at zero after the value of government aid given when it was nationalised in February 2008 was subtracted.

The Bank of England bailed out the business with emergency funds in 2007 when money markets froze and investors started the first run on a UK bank for a century leaving the bank unable to gain funding by securitizing its mortgages.

The decision by the Upper Tribunal Tax and Chancery Chamber affirming the valuer’s judgment was published yesterday.

The tribunal judge Nicholas Warren wrote in the final decision: “We have before us no evidence that the Government damaged Northern Rock.”

On the Dexia Bank bailout

Stratfor Vice President of Analysis Peter Zeihan discusses the collapse of the Franco-Belgian bank Dexia and examines its effects on the European debt crisis.

The Franco-Belgian bank Dexia started collapsing Oct. 4, ushering the latest chapter of the nearly 2-year-old European financial crisis. Considering that Dexia is on the list of the top 50 global financial institutions, it is worth examining what happens during a bank bailout and shutdown process and applying that to the Dexia situation.

In minor cases, a cash infusion from a government is usually sufficient to hold the bank over until such time that normal economic growth can help the bank regenerate its finances. Growth has been middling in Belgium since 2008, and Dexia simply hasn’t been able to get out from under the problems caused by its non-performing assets.

In moderate cases, governments come in and take a percentage share of ownership of the bank, putting their own representatives on the bank’s board and forcibly restructuring it. This has already been done for Dexia, too. In the aftermath of that 2008 bailout, Dexia became majority-owned by various governments in France and Belgium.

But the restructuring procedures have not followed what we would consider to be a standard course. Normally, there are major changes at the top and policies are adjusted all throughout to make sure that the sort of indiscretions that led to the bank problems in the first place don’t happen again. Dexia, however, is not a normal consumer or business bank. Instead, much of its business comes from supplying credit to various parts of the Belgian state apparatus.

So when these entities took greater control of Dexia back in 2008, instead of encouraging Dexia to engage in more lending to private enterprise, which might actually regenerate its loan book, they instead encouraged Dexia to invest more in their dead issuances, allowing them to run larger deficits than they would’ve been able to otherwise. Somewhat ironically, the last bailout actually only reinforced the bad policies that had gotten Dexia into trouble the first place.

The final option is some sort of dissolution —typically the bank is broken up into pieces. The good pieces typically find eager buyers who are willing to pay more or less market value. The bad pieces, however, have to be bundled into some sort of bad bank where ultimately they are sold off piecemeal at pennies on the dollar. This is really the only option that is left for Dexia. But there are several problems even with this strategy.

First, any good asset sales right now in the current environment are not going to be bringing what we would consider full market value. Europe is basically in a mild recession at present — it could get a lot worse because of the financial crisis — and European banks have so far proven unwilling to lend much money to each other, much less go out and grab assets from a failed bank and one of Europe’s most debt-heavy states. Which means that the losses that the state is going to absorb when this is all resolved are going to be much higher than they would normally be.

Second, Belgium doesn’t have the money to absorb the losses of the bad bank right now anyway. Belgium already has a national debt of 100 percent of GDP and is having problems raising capital under normal circumstances — much less the sort of large infusion that would be required for a bailout of Dexia. Additionally, under normal circumstances, Belgium would turn to Dexia for financing — that’s obviously not an option anymore, which means, at least in the initial stages, the financial burden is going to be carried by France and France alone — something which will cost Belgium more in the long run.

Third, considering that Dexia is leveraged by a factor of 60-1 (for comparison, Lehman Brothers was only 30-1) and because it’s already 35-percent owned by the state, this is a bank that is going to be suffering far greater losses than normal because it’s extraordinarily damaged.

Dexia has over 500 billion euros in assets and 20 billion of those are government debts of Portugal, Italy and Greece. So let’s assume for the moment that the bailout only costs the Belgian government about 30 billion euros — which we see as fairly conservative. That alone would be sufficient to increase Belgium’s national debt load to 110 percent of GDP, putting them within easy reach of where Italy is right now.

Fourth, Dexia is a leading source of financing for the Belgian government – it’s not there anymore. Belgium is going to have to find another way to raise money on international markets — not just to cover the bailout but to cover its normal activities. That’s becoming increasingly difficult for states that have high debt and low government competency, and Belgium is certainly in that list. It’s now been over 480 days since Belgium has had a government, and last month its prime minister decided that he was going to quit. Added together, Belgium is being pushed very very close to needing a state bailout of its own.

(c) http://www.stratfor.com/ All rights reesrved. Reproduced with permissiom

Thursday 6 October 2011

European crisis : Precise solutions in an imprecise reality

By George Friedman of www.stratfor.com


An important disconnect over the discussion of the future of the European Union exists, one that divides into three parts. First, there is the question of whether the various plans put forward in Europe plausibly could result in success given the premises they are based on. Second, there is the question of whether the premises are realistic. And third, assuming they are realistic and the plans are in fact implemented, there is the question of whether they can save the European Union as it currently exists.
The plans all are financial solutions to a particular set of financial problems. But regardless of whether they are realistic in addressing the financial problem, the question of whether the financial issue really addresses the fundamental dilemma of Europe — which is political and geopolitical — remains.
STRATFOR has examined the plans for dealing with the financial crisis in Europe, and we find them technically plausible, even if they involve navigating something of a minefield. The eurozone’s bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Facility, would be expanded in scope and reach until it can handle the bailout of a major state, the default of a minor state and a banking crisis of unprecedented proportions. Given assumptions of the magnitude of the problem and assuming general compliance with the plans, there is a chance that the solution we see the Germans moving toward could work.
The extraordinary complexity of the plans being floated in Europe is important to note. It is extremely difficult for us to understand the specifics, and we suspect the politicians proposing it are also less than clear on them. We have found that the more uncertain the solution, the more complex it is. And the complexity of the European situation is less driven by the complexity of the economics than by the complexity of the politics. The problem is relatively easy: Banks and countries under massive financial pressure almost certainly will default without extensive aid. By giving them money, default can be avoided. But the political complexity of giving them money and the opposition by many Europeans on all sides to this solution contributes to the complexity. The greater the complexity, the more interests can be satisfied and — ultimately — the less understanding there is about what has been promised. Some subjects require complexity, and this is one of them. The degree of complexity in this case tells another tale.

The Foundation of the Crisis

Part of that tale is about two dubious assumptions at the foundation of the crisis. The first is the assumption that interested parties are genuinely aware of the size of the financial problems, and to the extent they are aware of it, that they are being honest about it. Ever since 2008, the singular truth of the financial community globally has been that they were either unaware of the extent of the financial problems on the whole or unaware of the realities of their own institutions. An alternative explanation is, of course, willful ignorance. This translates as the leaders being fully aware of the magnitude of the problem but understating it to buy time or to position themselves personally for better outcomes. It could also simply be a case of their being engaged in helpless hopefulness — that is, they knew there was nothing they could do but remained hopeful that someone else would find a solution. In sum, it combined incompetence, willful deception and willful delusion.
Consider the charge that the Greeks falsified financial data. While undoubtedly true, it misses the point. The job of bankers is to analyze data from loan applicants and to uncover falsehoods. The charge against the Greeks can thus be extended to bankers. How could they not have discovered the Greek deception?
There are two answers. The first is that they didn’t want to. The global system of compensation among financial institutions — from home mortgages to the purchase of government bonds — separates the transaction from the outcome. In other words, in many cases bankers are not held responsible for the outcome of the loan and are paid for the acquisition and resale of the loan alone. They are therefore not particularly aggressive in assessing the quality of a given loan. Frequently, they work with borrowers to make their debt look more attractive.
During the U.S. subprime crisis, in the mortgage crisis in Central Europe and in the sovereign debt and banking crisis in Europe, the system placed a premium on transactions, immunizing bankers from the repayment of loans. The validity of the numbers systematically were skewed toward the most favorable case.
More important, such numbers — not only of the status of loans but also about the economic and social status of the debtors — inherently are uncertain. This is crucial because part of the proposed European solution is the imposition of austerity on debtor nation states. The specifics of that austerity and its effect on the ability to repay after austerity heavily depend on the validity of available economic and social statistics.
There is an interesting belief, at least in the advanced industrial countries, that government-issued statistics reflect reality. The idea is that the people who issued these statistics are civil servants, impervious to political pressure and therefore likely providing accurate data. A host of reasons exists for looking at national statistics with a jaundiced eye beyond the risk of politicians pressuring civil servants.
For one, collecting statistics on a society is a daunting task. Even small countries have millions of people. The national statistical database is based on the assumption that all of the transactions and productions of these millions can be measured accurately, or at least measured within some knowable range of error. This is an overwhelming undertaking.
The solution is not the actual counting of transactions — an impossible task — but the creation of statistical models that make assumptions based on various methodologies. There are competing models that provide different outcomes based on sampling procedures or mathematical models. Even without pressure from politicians, civil servants and their academic mentors have personal commitments to certain models.
The center of gravity of our global statistical system, particularly those of advanced industrial countries, is that the selection of statistical models is frequently subject to complex disputes of experts who vehemently disagree with one another. This is also a point where political pressure can be applied. Given the disagreements, the decision on which methodology to use — from sampling to reporting — is subject to political decisions because the experts are divided and as contentious as all human beings are on any subject they care about.
And this is the point at which outside decisions are made, based on outcome, not on the subtleties of mathematical modeling. There is a connection between the numbers and reality, but the mathematics of a bailout rests on a statistical base of sand. It is always assumed that this is the case in the developing world. This creates a certain advantage, in that it is understood that the statistics are unreliable. By contrast, the advanced industrial countries have the hubris to believe that complex mathematics has solved the problem of knowing what hundreds of millions of people in billions of transactions actually have done.

A Culture of Opaque States

Compounding this challenge, the European Union has incorporated societies on its periphery that never have accepted the principle that states must be transparent, a problem exacerbated by EU regulations. Southern and Central Europeans always have been less impressed by the state than Germans, for example. This is not simply about paying taxes but about a broader distrust of government, something deeply embedded in history. Meanwhile, regulations from Brussels, whose tax and employment laws make entrepreneurship and small business ownership extraordinarily difficult, have forced a good deal of the economy “off the books,” aka underground.
While not an EU state, Moldova — said to be the poorest country in Europe — is an instructive example. When I visited it a year ago, the city (and villages outside the city) was filled with banks (from Societe Generale on down) and BMWs. There was clear poverty, but there also was a wealth and vibrancy not captured in intergovernmental statistics. The numbers spoke of grinding poverty; the streets spoke of a more complex reality.
What exactly is the state of the Greek, Spanish or Italian economy? That is hard to say. Official statistics that count the legal economy suffer from methodological uncertainty. Moreover, a good deal of the economy is not included in the numbers. One assessment says that 10 percent of all employees are off the books. Another says 40 percent of Greeks define themselves as self-employed. A third estimates that 40 percent of the total Greek economy is in the grey sector. When evaluating what tries to remain hidden, you’re reduced to guesswork. No one really knows, any more than anyone really knows how many illegal immigrants are participating in the U.S. economy. The difference, however, is that this knowledge is of profound importance to the entire EU bailout.
The level of indebtedness and the ownership of the debt of European banks and countries are as murky as who held asset-backed securities in the United States. Yet there is a precise plan designed to solve a problem that can’t be quantified or allocated. The complexity and precision of the plan fails to recognize the uncertainty because the governments and banks are loath to admit that they just aren’t certain. The banks have grown so big and their relationships so complex that the uncertainty principle parallels the state’s. The United States — where the same governing authority handles all fiscal, monetary and social policies — powered through such uncertainties in the 2008 financial crisis by sheer mass and speed. Europe, with dozens of (often competing) authorities, so far has found it impossible to exercise that option.
The countries that face default and austerity have no better understanding of their own internal reality than the financial institutions understand their own internal reality. Greek numbers on the consequences of austerity for government workers do not take into account that many of those workers show up to work only occasionally while working another job that is not taxed or known to the state statistical services. Thus, one has a complete split between the state and banking systems’ ability to honor debt obligations, the insistence on austerity and the social reality of the country.
Germany has always been different. Ever since the early 19th century German philosopher Georg Hegel declared the German civil service had ended history, the idea of the state as the embodiment of reason has meant something to Germans that it did not mean to others — in both a noble and a horrible sense. We are now at the noble end of the spectrum, but the idea that the state is the embodiment of reason still doesn’t capture the European reality. The Brussels bureaucracy is based on the German view that a disinterested civil servant can produce rational solutions that partisan politicians and self-interested citizens could not.
The founding concept of the European Union involves joining nations that do not share this view, and even find it bizarre, with a nation for which it is the cultural core. This has created the fundamental existential issue in the European Union.
The realization that the rational civil servants of Brussels and Berlin have failed to create systems that understand reality strikes at German self-perceptions. There is a willful urge to retain the perception that they understand what is going on. From the standpoint of Southern and Central Europe, the realization that the Germans genuinely thought that the states on the EU periphery had reached the level of precision of the German civil services (assuming Germany had in fact reached that stage), or that they even wanted to, is a shock. Their publics, which saw the European Union as a means of getting in on German prosperity without undergoing a massive social upheaval putting the state and the civil service — disciplined and rational — at the center of their society, experienced an even greater shock.
The political and geopolitical problem is simply this: Germany is unique in Europe in terms of both size and values. It tried to create a free trade zone based on German values allied with France that looked at the world in a much more complex way. The crisis we are seeing, which Germany is trying to solve with extraordinary complexity and precision, rests on a highly unstable base. First, the European banking system, like the American banking system, does not understand its status. Second, the entire mathematics of national statistics is inherently imprecise. Third, the peripheral countries of the European Union have economies that cannot be measured at all because their informal economies are massive. The fundamental principles and self-conception of Germany and Central Europe diverge massively. The elites of these countries might like to think of themselves as Europeans first — by the German definition — but the publics know they are not, and they don’t want to be.
The precision of the bailout schemes reveals the underlying misunderstanding of reality by Europe’s elites, and specifically by the Germans. To be more precise, this is willful misunderstanding. They all know that their precision rests on a foundation of uncertainty. They are buying time hoping that prosperity will return, mooting all of these problems. But the problem is that a precise solution to a vastly uncertain problem is unlikely to return Europe to its happy past. Reality — or rather the fundamental unreality of Europe — has returned.
In some sense, this is no different from the United States and China. But the United States has its Constitution and the Civil War’s consequences to hold itself together in the face of this problem, and China has the Communist Party’s security apparatus to give it a shot. Europe, by contrast, has nothing to hold it together but the promise of prosperity and the myth of the rational civil servant — the cultural and political side of the underlying geopolitical problem.

Sunday 4 September 2011

Predators circling Northern Rock

After Virgin Money leaks to the BBC, now there are leaks by J C Flowers to the Sunday Times (4th September) about their plans to acquire Northern Rock.

Always nice to know the vultures are circling the body of  a long-loved friend....


Both are said to have made indicative offers of around £1 billion - meaning  a loss for the taxpayers of £400 million (something we have long vbelieved is unnnecessary but being pushed for political expediency)

Virgin Money is backed by "American dealmaker Wilbur Ross and the University Lecturers' Pension Fund" Do our readers at Newcastle, Northumbria, Durham, Sunderland and Teesside Universities know or care?

J C Flowers is alleged to be backed by the Chinese Government through its state investment fund CIC.
It owns the Kent Reliance Building Society (which pays amongst the highest rates of interst to savers) and One Savings Bank.  It is chaired by Sir Callum McCarthy, former chairman of the Financial Services Agency at the time of the Northern Rock Crash.

Both  "bidders" first expressed interest in  Northern Rock in 2007.

If we've got any facts wrong, or you are also bidding for the Rock, we'd be happy to hear from you direct...

Monday 8 August 2011

Thank you for your support!

We don't usually bother with statistics, but we impressed ouselves but checking out the figures for visitors to this site over the last few years. We're on an upward trend!

2008 2759 page loads

2009 3365 page loads


2010 5037 page loads (by over 1600 visitors)

YTD 2759 page loads

So thank you very much for your new/continuing support!


Wednesday 3 August 2011

Northern Rock latest accounts published (first half of 2011)

HEADLINES
- loss reduced
- value of the business down
- likely sale price around £1 billion
- remutualisation unlikely as Yorkshire and Coventry Building Societies seem to lose interest

The BBC reported the following details

Publicly owned Northern Rock plc has reported a pre-tax loss of £68.5m in the six months to 30 June, compared with a loss of £142.6m the previous year. The company was created last year after the lender was split between in two as a precursor to a sale



The deadline for bids ended last week, with Virgin and JC Flowers reportedly interested.
There have been no reported bids from building societies. At least two, Coventry and Yorkshire, have ruled themselves out of the bidding.
The second part of Northern Rock - Northern Rock Asset Management - holds the bank's more risky loans, which might not be paid back. It is not due to be sold.
Sale
Northern Rock PLC said it expected to return to profit in 2012 and hoped to return to private ownership shortly.
The bank, currently owned by UK Financial Investments, did not announce a precise timetable for the sale process.
"We are pleased with the level of interest we have received and will continue to explore the sale option over the coming months," said the bank's financial statement.
The bank said its reduced losses were the result of a rise in income from interest on loans - especially mortgages - and lower costs.
However, lending actually fell. Gross lending, including retention business, was £1.5bn in the six months to 30 June 2011, compared with £2bn the previous year.
The bank said the retail environment remained tough and competitive - especially while bank interest rates remained low, limiting potential profits on loans.
"The environment remained challenging for a small, predominantly retail-funded, bank like Northern Rock," the bank said.

Sunday 26 June 2011

Northern Rock for sale?


It was an interesting and eloquent speech by the Chancellor that sees Northern Rock being sold, or at least part of it, but do the former shareholders actually care?

The Chancellor expects to enrich the tax payer by around £1billion in the sale of Northern Rock plc, otherwise termed "the good bank", yet he refuses to honour the rights of the former shareholders and actually pay fair market value for the goods taken by the former Labour government.

When the so called "bad bank" is sold, it is highly likely that the government will not only recoup any investment it made in Northern Rock but will enrich itself with a cool profit "in the interests of the tax payer".

Given that the 180,000 private shareholders in Northern Rock were or still are taxpayers,
we fail to see how this biased transaction is in their "best interests".

Mervyn King also seemed to acknowledge that the main issues stemmed from the UK's change in capital adequacy back in the late 1990's and the "light touch" regulation of the financial markets as a whole. Could this be seen as an admittance of failure not with banks themselves but with the fraternity charged with the governance of the financial markets?

Despite these admissions of value in Northern Rock and the failure of the regulators that gave permission for the banks to operate as they did, this still sees the shareholders penniless.

If, as our rights allow, the bias implemented by the government is ignored, this would see that Northern Rock was actually worth something when it was seized from us, worth quite a considerable sum in fact.

The assessments of value ascertained in the legal cases brought by SRM Global, RAB Capital and the Small Shareholder Plaintiffs (now awaiting the verdict of the European Court of Human Rights) and more recently a separate case in the Upper Tribunal led by Harbinger Capital, again supported by the Small Shareholders sees significant value in the assets of Northern Rock on the day of nationalisation in 2008.

Whilst arguing different in the aspects of legislation, policy and application of value, it is clear that without the bias of the governments terms and conditions and analysis of the assets and use of terminology (which in real life are impractical and unworkable) that we expect could bring about value to the former shareholders of between £4 and £7 per share, but this would need to be confirmed in a full, professional valuation without bias or prejudice one way or the other.

This group continues to support and represent the views and opinions of the former Northern Rock shareholders across the board and we will continue in our quest for fairness.

Ongoing Legal Action

Further to update 70 in March this year, we still await the European Court of Human Rights verdict of the main legal case initially heard in the High Court in January 2009 although the expectations on a timescale are late 2012 or early 2013.

More recently, as indicated by Mr Caldwell in his final statement in 2010, small shareholders have made numerous representations to the Upper Tribunal. Many of the submission were unfortunately out of the jurisdiction of the Upper Tribunal and whilst valid and heartfelt, couldn't be considered in that forum.

The NRSAG Committee considered these in detail with advice from David Greene at Edwin Coe solicitors from which Chris Hulme made a personal submission representative of as many of those views as could be considered by the Upper Tribunal.

As Harbinger, the lead institutional investor, had already covered most of the submissions
and cases made by individual shareholders, they were better served in a personal submission by Chris Hulme in support of the main points of Harbinger with the costversus benefit aspects also in mind from your donations and contributions.

What does this mean for the former shareholders?

Whilst the news of the Governments intended sale price provides the confirmation that Northern Rock still has value, the news of its intention to sell Northern Rock plc will have no bearing on the shareholders receiving compensation as the funds raised from the sale will head straight to the governments' pocket and will continue to leave ours well and truly empty.

The case continues...

Chris Hulme

Chairman

Tel: 07775 794 291

Email: northernrock@uksa.org.uk [mailto:northernrock@uksa.org.uk]

On behalf Northern Rock Shareholders Action Group

Northern Rock lost £232 million - but pays bonuses


Nationalised lender Northern Rock has posted losses of £232.4m in 2010.
But the company said it was making progress, with income up and costs reduced during the second half of its financial year.
Despite the loss, Northern Rock says it is paying staff £13.1m bonuses for last year.
The bank was split into two parts in 2010 - assets and banking - to help its eventual sale back to the private sector.
James Ferguson from Arbuthnot Securities told the BBC Northern Rock is a ''very different beast to the bank we saw before''.

Monday 11 April 2011

Invitation from Newcastle University to tell your Northern Rock story

Did you have shares in Northern Rock on the day of nationalisation in February 2008??

If so, would you be willing to spend half a day at Newcastle University in discussion with
University researchers and with small groups of other former Northern Rock shareholders
interested in the story you have to tell about how you came to own those shares?

They are especially interested in hearing from shareholders who :

· acquired their shares in consequence of the conversion of the Northern Rock in 1997 from
building society to bank and/or

· are from the North East region and/or

·work or worked for Northern Rock and acquired their shares under one of the employee
share schemes and/or

·acquired shares in Northern Rock for the first time after September 2007 or added to their
existing shareholding after that time….



Please be assured that complete confidentiality and anonymity is guaranteed by the research
team and that they are interested in simply understanding better and at a deeper level the
motivations of small Northern Rock shareholders (especially local ones) to become and
remain shareholders in the bank. Any ideas and information generated in these discussions
will be used solely for academic purposes and any data collected will be kept secure and
encrypted within the University.

If you are willing to participate in this research study or you know someone else who is
please contact us Newcastle University and let them have your contact details.

Contact by email : joanna.gray@newcastle.ac.uk

or writing to Professor Joanna Gray, Professor of Financial Regulation, Newcastle Law
School, Newcastle University, 21 – 24 Windsor Terrace, Jesmond, Newcastle upon Tyne,
NE1 7RU

telephone: Mrs Joanne Pinnock or Mrs Gemma Hayton on 0191 222 8736

Friday 8 April 2011

Newcastle University study on Northern Rock

Newcsatle University is looking for volunteers to help with a research project into the nature and composition of the shareholding base of Northern Rock as at February 2008. They would like to gather together small focus groups drawn from individuals who were small shareholders in Northern Rock at the time of nationalisation to explore how and why they became shareholders in the bank and also what their understanding of the nature of the shares they held actually was as well as what expectations they had (if any) of the role of financial regulation and the FSA in the time leading up to the run and the nationalisation. A Law Professor will be working on this project with colleagues based in the Centre for Urban and Regional Development Studies at thed University and also with a visiting academic from the University of Chicago who is an anthropologist by background but interested in the North East region and the effects that the events at Northern Rock have had on the region.

A fuller explanation is being obtained, inluding contact details, and will be posted as soon as possible.

Wednesday 23 March 2011

Northern Rock starts back into mortgage-backed securities business

Story in today's Newcatle Journal

NORTHERN Rock plc is planning the first issue of bonds backed by its own mortgages since it collapsed in 2007.




The Newcastle-based bank has said it will package together some of its “high quality“ home loans to offload as part of the mortgage securitisation as it increases the amount of money it can lend.



The move is a further sign that the taxpayer-owned company is returning to the way most banks operate to prepare itself for a sale into the private sector.



A Northern Rock spokesman said: “This transaction demonstrates another positive step in Northern Rock’s journey.



“Northern Rock will remain a primarily retail funded bank, with this transaction representing only 2% of our balance sheet. It will provide diversification into a cost-effective form of funding in the best interests of taxpayers.”



The creation of the asset-backed securities will amount to around 2% of Northern Rock’s balance sheet on December 31 last year.



“This transaction will diversify both the source and term of the company’s funding base, and will be offered to investors in sterling and euros,” said the bank.



“This will be a standalone transaction, secured on high quality UK mortgage assets, selected from the company’s total loan book of £12.2bn.”



The Rock’s new lending has been funded by retail savings since its bail-out in the credit crisis. But the securitisation will raise up to £400m and considerably increase the amount it has available to lend.



The bank is confident the proposition will prove attractive to investors because of the high quality of its mortgage book, which has a loan to value average of 59%, with arrears also running at a low rate of 0.17%.



When the business split into the ‘good’ Northern Rock plc and the ‘bad’ bank, Northern Rock Asset Management (NRAM), at the start of 2010, its historical securitisation funding went with NRAM.



Around 35% to 40% of the company was funded this way before the Rock’s collapse and securitisation represented a higher share of the newer funding.



Securitisation was blamed for contributing to the credit crunch but it has since emerged that many of these mortgage-backed securities were based on risky loans, taken out at the height of the borrowing boom.



Mortgage-backed securities allow banks to bundle loans into instruments that are sold in the markets, freeing up their balance sheets and providing them with room to offer more loans.



They were largely blamed for causing the credit squeeze that brought banks such as Northern Rock to their knees.



It has emerged since the crunch that many mortgage-backed securities were based on risky loans, taken out at the height of the borrowing boom.



The Rock’s return to the securitisation market follows other banks, including part-nationalised Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group, which have gone back to mortgage-backed funding markets. It suggests things may be set to improve for borrowers who are still struggling to access affordable lending.



Northern Rock will be running roadshows over the next few weeks for institutional investors interested in the securitisation.



The Rock appointed Deutsche Bank earlier this month to advise on its sale back to the private sector, just days after posting an annual loss of £232.4m. But Rock executive chairman Ron Sandler has put no timetable on a sale.

Saturday 19 March 2011

Campaign for remutualisation of the Rock gathers support

"The Government has made clear its support for mutuals and  diversifying the financial services sector in the Coalition agreement. (See text in previous post)

"We are calling for ministers to honour this commitment and ensure a feasibility study is carried out into remutualising Northern Rock.

"A mutual future for Northern Rock has many advantages, which include encouraging a more responsible attitude to risk in financial services, promoting competition and choice, increasing the power of consumers and rooting financial institutions in the communities they serve.

"If we are serious about changing the way the sector operates and its attitude, what better way to start than by remutualising Northern Rock plc and giving life to the mutual sector?"

- Chuka Umunna MP

"Whilst Northern Rock plc has recently reported disappointing financial results, its future as a mutaul could potentially be much brighter."

- Catherine McKinnel MP

Thursday 17 March 2011

Building Societies Association urged remutualisation of Northern Rock

In its Budget submission to the Chancellor of the Exchequer the BSA said

The BSA welcomes the commitment by the Coalition Government to foster diversity, promote mutuals and create a more competitive banking industry. A financial system with diverse ownership and governance structures is better able to weather the strains of the business cycle than one which is plc-dominated. Mutuals can counter-balance the short-termist pressure of the City. Mutuals also help reduce the concentration of financial sector resources and employment in the City, dispersing wealth and welfare to regional and local economies.

Keeping a reformed Northern Rock independent of the big banks would be good for competition.  A remutualised Northern Rock would help the Government to meet its policy objective of supporting competition and diversity through the maintenance of a strong mutually-owned financial sector. In any exit process the Government needs to achieve optimum value for the taxpayer.  A re-launched and remutualised Northern Rock can repay the taxpayer stake over time. A deferred payment profile can give the optimum outcome, both returning the full value to the taxpayer and achieving other public policy goals, such as increased stability and competition.

More than 50 MPs have called for the remutualisation of Northern Rock

REMUTUALISATION OF NORTHERN ROCK - EDM 1351

That this House notes that the three year anniversary of the nationalisation of Northern Rock falls in February 2011; recognises the need for competition and choice in the financial services sector; welcomes the Government's commitment, articulated in the May 2010 Coalition Agreement, to bring forward detailed proposals to foster diversity in financial services, promote mutuals and create a more competitive banking industry; believes that a thriving mutual sector adds to the diversity and strength of the UK's financial system; applauds the democratic structure of financial mutuals which make them accountable to their customers, as well as their strong record for customer satisfaction and links with the communities they serve; further recognises that financial mutuals' traditional business model involves less risky financial activity than other firms in the sector; is concerned by the consolidation in the UK financial services sector following the financial crash of 2008; further notes that the Government has yet to outline its position on the future of Northern Rock and that UK Financial Investments (UKFI) has issued an invitation for expressions of interest from corporate finance advisers to work with both UKFI and Northern Rock in the evaluation of the strategic options for the company; and calls on the Government to give equal and due consideration to a mutual option for the future for Northern Rock by requiring UKFI to undertake a feasibility study and seek advice into remutualising Northern Rock plc.

Sunday 13 March 2011

Coalition Government agreement on banking and business

The actual text of the agreement on banking and business can be found at http://busmatters.blogspot.com with a link through to the whole text of the agreement.

Friday 11 March 2011

Northern Rock hires Deutsche Bank for sale

This has appeared in the papers.

Robin Ashby spoke on Radio Newcastle this week about
- the latest results
- bonuses for staff
- advisers

The loss doesn't necessarily mean anything. There could be more "clearing of the decks" - financial engineering so that downgrades can be written down, which new owners could write back in to make a profit. Or to create more tax losses and reduce tax on future profits. It's interesting that NR is considering buying assets which are supposed to be "bad" back from the "Bad bank"  - Northern Rock Asset Management. They weren't so bad after all? Which is what we've been saying for a long time. The proposal to restart 90% mortgages would help first time buyers who have great difficulty with the large deposits lenders are currently demanding of them.

We have no problem with bonuses for counter staff and junior levels. This money would most likely feed straight back into the local economy, as it will be spent mostly in the region. We have  a lot more problem with multi million pound bonuses for people at the top of the tree.

Why is more high priced help being brought in? A fortune is already being spent on consultants. Any buyer will want to check the books. The newspapers will tell you who could be interested in buying Northern Rock. A quick email to Branson and others who've already put their heads up is all that's needed. There's too much incestuous feeding of City slickers already, we can't see why this is necessary.

Your comments welcome as always!

Monday 7 March 2011

Northern Rock results due out this week

Forecasts are that losses of around £230 million will be announced ; a cost-cutting programme inc back off services as a prelude to a sell off; perhaps the gloves will come off as they step up efforts to gain new customers (90% mortgages were re-introduced recently) ; and the appointment of Morgan Stanley (no doubt for sky high fees) to oversee privatisation of the bank that was taken from us.